Agricultura urbana
Agricultra urbana, vel horticultura urbana, est ratio cibi in vel circa regiones urbanas colendi, tractandi, et distribuendi.[1] Quae etiam educationem animalium, aquaculturam, agrosilvationem, apiculturam urbanam, et horticulturam implicat. Quae res etiam in regionibus periurbanis fiunt, atque agricultura periurbana alias proprietates requirere potest.[2]
Agricultura urbana varios evolutionis oeconomicae socialisque gradus comprehendere potest. Motus socialis fieri potest pro communitatibus quae sustineri volunt, ubi cultores organici, foodies, et locavora varia retia socialia constituunt quae in communicatis naturae holismique communis exemplaribus conduntur. Quae retia se evolvere possunt cum subsidia ex institutionibus iustis accipiant, se cum destinatione urbana eorum locorum consociantes ut motus "oppidi transitionis" ad progressum urbanum qui sustineri potest dicatus. Apud alios, securitas cibi, nutritio, quaestusque pecuniae multum valent. Utro autem modo obtinente, ad holera recentia, fructus, plurimasque res per agriculturam urbanam adhibitam recte admitti certam securitatem salutemque cibi vitam urbanam meliorem facere possunt.
Nexus interni
Notae
[recensere | fontem recensere]Bibliographia
[recensere | fontem recensere]- Bailkey, Martin, et J. Nasr. 2000. "From Brownfields to Greenfields: Producing Food in North American Cities." Community Food Security News (Fall 1999 / Winter 2000): 6.
- Carpenter, Novella. 2009. Farm city: the education of an urban farmer. Novi Eboraci: Penguin Press. ISBN 9781594202216.
- Hampwaye, H., E. Nel, et L. Ingombe. "The role of urban agriculture in addressing household poverty and food security: the case of Zambia." Gdnet.org.
- Hodgson, Kimberley, Marcia Caton Campbell, et Martin Bailkey. 2011. Urban agriculture: growing healthy, sustainable places. Sicagi: American Planning Association. ISBN 9781932364910, ISBN 1932364919.
- Nordahl, Darrin. 2009. Public produce: the new urban agriculture. Vasingtoniae: Island Press. ISBN 9781597265874, ISBN 159726587X, ISBN 9781597265881, ISBN 1597265888.
- Pinderhughes, Raquel. 2004. Alternative Urban Futures: Planning for sustainable development in cities throughout the world. Lanham Terrae Mariae: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9780742523678, ISBN 0-7425-2366-7. Google Books.
- Rich, Sarah C. 2012. Urban farms. Photographemata Matthew Benson. Novi Eboraci: Abrams. ISBN 9781419701993, ISBN 1419701991.
Nexus externi
[recensere | fontem recensere]Vicimedia Communia plura habent quae ad agriculturam urbanam spectant. |
- Brophy, Mary. "City Farm Grows Jobs, Knowledge, and Tomatoes. Chi-Town Daily News, 4 Septembris 2008.
- Chamberlain, Lisa.2007. "Skyfarming." New York Magazine, 30 Martii 2007.
- Chow, Renee. "Changing Chinese Cities: The Potentials of Field Urbanism." Colloquium interrogatorium.
- Guérois, Denise, et Denise Pumain. 2008. "Built-Up Encroachment and the Urban Field: A Comparison of Forty European Cities." Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space. doi:org/10.1068/a39382.
- Metaala, Stefan. "Urban Field, a Geographical Definition." Stefan Metaal's Urban Sociology Site.
- Wayland, Michael. 2013. "GM expanding urban gardening program in Detroit". MLive. 29 Augusti 2013.
- "Farming Goes Vertical." CNN.
- Foederatio Fundorum Urbanorum et Hortorum Communitatum.
- Foederatio Fundorum Urbanorum Europae.
- "Urban and peri-urban horticulture: Growing greener cities." Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.
- "Turning Shipping Containers Into Urban Farms." Smithsonian Magazine, Septembri 2015.
- "URBACT: Sustainable food in urban communities."
- "Water, Land, and Health of Urban and Peri-Urban food production."